i would say jeremy grantham. but the whole are we coming to the end of an era. in fact i think one of our guests today wrote a piece on this. the end of the era where we could count on 3% average growth in the united states in order to develop the economy. >> right. >> okay. if we are coming to the end of that era, and we are now in a slow growth world, then there are a whole bunch of decisions that we need to make looking forward, different than the decisions that we made in the past. and i think one of the things you're looking at in washington, d.c., with this whole fiscal cliff debacle, or spectacle, is politicians are flopping around in denial that they are up finally against the wall where they can no longer count on robust growth to bail them out. actually have to start making hard decisions. and what you're seeing in d.c. is really the politics of taking things away. used to be you could go back to clinton and gingrich. they wanted to come to accommodations, they both got what they want. now boehner wins, obama loses, obama wins, boehner loses, we're not